Originally posted by: tbone3969
Originally posted by: arch_8ngel
Please provide an authoritative source that clearly demonstrates the efficacy of more elaborate (and evidently traumatic to some students) run/hide/fight training for students versus basic lockdown drills.
I can't. Im just thinking through a hypothetical school shooting situation logically. If you can add even thirty seconds of time where kids are out of sight and safe, how can you argue that would not save lives? What if you could add minutes to tens of minutes of "safe time" before the police arrived? Logically this would save lives. What data do you need?
I haven't traced it all the way through to a primary source, but read the story I provided and find the quote I mentioned.
The point is that simple lockdowns can probably be trained in a non-traumatizing way, reliably AND they work.
Run/hide/fight training supposedly has worse outcomes than no training at all and results in plenty of stories about the kind of anxiety it causes in kids.
Seems like a lose-lose, to me.
Effective training (i.e. lockdowns) does not need to be characterized to kids as active shooter training or "bad guy" drills.
That is my primary objection, as it appears to put a lot of undue stress on kids for a scenario that is extremely unlikely (only a handful of gun incidents at elementary schools since 1999 and only a couple of that handful had students ever being at direct risk).
Maybe at the high school level there is a case to be made for something other than a lockdown drill.
(though it doesn't seem easy to find evidence that the training matters)
But kids in elementary school have absolutely nothing to contribute to a potentially dangerous scenario beyond playing a game of hide and seek in their classroom with the lights out.